The Jewish Chronicle

New app launched of Kindertans­port story

- BY SIMON ROCKER

V THE NATIONAL Holocaust Centre and Museum has launched a new app based on its Kindertran­sport exhibition for primary children.

The Journey is an interactiv­e story game in which participan­ts take the role of Leo, a Jewish boy living in Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1938.

Marc Cave, chief executive of the Nottingham­shire-based centre, said “the content and channels of Holocaust education have got to keep pace with popular culture.

“Holocaust denial and revisionis­m flourishes on Facebook. Anti-Jewish tropes used by the Nazis are alive and well on Twitter. Yet too much Holocaust and indeed all forms of anti-racism education relies on staid delivery techniques. We have been fighting hate with a blackboard pointer.”

He hoped the app would combine “the traditiona­l virtues of plot, character and good production values with the power of digital interactiv­ity to put our audience right into the story themselves”.

The app was directed by Bright

White, animated by Studio Liddell and built by D3T over a three-year period, with funding from the Arts Council and Ministry of Housing, Communitie­s and Local Government.

Its Apple Store launch was marked with a series of NHC&M digital events for Refugee Week this week.

Ruth Barnett, a Kindertran­sport survivor, said the exhibition gave primary pupils “an experience of what life was like for children of their age at the time of Hitler’s Reich… The possibilit­ies for a user of this app are many times greater than those in the exhibition.”

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